At long last my philosophical novel is complete! A journey through space, time, and dreams, Planetary Messenger explores the social, scientific, and spiritual consequences of discovering another planet in the galaxy just like our Earth. I began this project as a NaNoWriMo entry in 2007 and continued editing and revising for a year and a half.

From the back cover:

Since the dawn of humanity we have gazed at the stars to ponder our existence. To the naked eye the skies are dark and lifeless, but what if, through a glass, we looked to the heavens and saw our mirror image, a twin Earth from afar? If we found our uniqueness shattered in the vast cosmic arena, then what, if anything, could we still hold sacred?

Planetary Messenger is now available either directly from Createspace or through Amazon. Thanks to all of you who have been part of my life so far and helped make this possible. Happy reading!

I’ve always known that the Kuiper belt and Oort Cloud are the outermost part of the Solar System, but I never had a sense of scale between the two. Kuiper belt objects, including Pluto and other dwarf planets, orbit at ~55 AU (0.001 light years). Compare to the Oort Cloud, a 50,000 AU (~1 light year) sphere containing billions of comets at the boundary of the Solar System’s gravitation.

We have hardly begun to explore the outer Solar System and Kuiper Belt, and have searched next to nothing of the Oort Cloud–analogous to only inspecting your garden box in a 100 acre plot of land. If extraterrestrials are observing us from the Oort Cloud, we have absolutely zero chance of knowing they’re here.

I came across this passage examining our culture’s attitude toward drug use, which I think extends beyond recreational psychedelic drugs to include drugs as a treatment for mental disorders. Physical substances that affect our mind and consciousness may lead us to a materialistic spirituality, in contrast with the dominant dualistic interpretation that asserts a non-physical mind or soul.

Deep-seated cultural biases explain why the Western mind turns suddenly anxious and repressive on contemplating drugs. Substance-induced changes in consciousness dramatically reveal that our mental life has physical foundations. Psychoactive drugs thus challenge the Christian assumption of the inviolability and special ontological status of the soul. Similarly, they challenge the modern idea of the ego and its inviolability and controls structures. In short, encounters with psychedelic plants throw into question the entire world view of the dominator culture.

From Food of the Gods (McKenna, 1992)

Venus today is far too hot to sustain surface liquid water or any biology requiring it, but did Venusian life exist in the past? Nearly all remains of past life would have been destroyed by now, but it is plausable–and perhaps likely–that Venus once boasted Earth-like oceans. This possibility exists because the sun may not have been as bright in the past.

Models of stellar evolution predict that a star brightens by about 30% over it’s main sequence lifetime due to core contraction as the star fuses hydrogen into helium. The inference of warmer-than-present temperatures for the early Earth despite the reduction in solar luminosity is known as the faint young sun paradox (one of my research interests). Earth seems to have sustained both liquid water and life for nearly 4 billion years, continually maintaining habitable temperatures.

So what happened to Venus? Eventually the surface received enough energy to evaporate the oceans and enter a positive feedback known as a runaway greenhouse. Today, we see a cloudy world with sulfuric acid rain and a surface hot enough to melt lead. But 4 billion years ago life could have arisen in the Venusian oceans and perhaps even lasted long enough to develop intelligence.

I can imagine a Venusian scientist carefully working out models of stellar evolution–only to find that their parent star was slowly and steadily brightening! We look back in time and find a faint young sun paradox, but the Venusians would have a contemporary warming sun catastrophe! The greatest climate disaster in the history of our solar system may well have been when Venus entered its runaway greenhouse state to become uninhabitable.

Thanks to an original design by the lovely Gina Riggio, I have overhauled my personal web page and given it a new home: haqqmisra.net

The page includes a blog with feed that will mostly entail details of my professional adventures, including updates on publications and schedules for upcoming musical performances.

Planetary Messenger is now available at Createspace and Amazon!

Planetary Messenger

If you like this blog, then be sure to pick up a copy of Planetary Messenger!

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